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You People Did This
Rolling Stone ^ | Recent Issue | Reshma Memon Yaqub

Posted on 10/10/2001 8:05:44 AM PDT by Dirk McQuickly

As I ran through my neighborhood on the morning of September 11th, in search of my son, who had gone to the park with his baby sitter, I wasn't just afraid of another hijacked plane crashing into us. I was also afraid that someone else would get to my son first, someone wanting revenge against anyone who looks like they're from "that part of the world." Even if he is just one and a half years old.

I know I wasn't just afraid that the building where my husband works, a D.C. landmark, might fall on him. I was also afraid that another American might stop him on the street and harass him, or hurt him, demanding to know why "you people" did this. As soon as we heard the news, 7 million American Muslims wondered in terror, "Will America blame me?"

When our country is terrorized, American Muslims are victimized twice. First, as Americans, by the madmen who strike at our nation, at our physical, mental and emotional core. Then we're victimized again, as Muslims, by those Americans who believe that all Muslims are somehow accountable for the acts of some madmen, that our faith - that our God, the same peace-loving God worshipped by Jews and Christians - sanctions it.

It didn't matter when the federal building in Oklahoma City blew up that a Muslim didn't do it. That a Christian man was responsible for the devastation in Oklahoma City certainly didn't matter to the thugs who terrorized a Muslim woman there, nearly seven months pregnant, by attacking her home, breaking her windows, screaming religious slurs. It didn't matter to them that Sahar Al-Muwsawi, 26, would, as a result, miscarry her baby. That she would bury him in the cold ground, alongside other victims of the Oklahoma City bombing, after naming him Salaam, the Arabic word for "peace."

But that travesty and hundreds like it certainly were on my mind that Tuesday morning. And they were reinforced every time a friend called to check on my family and to sadly remind me, "It's over for us. Muslims are done for."

Even as we buckled under the same grief that every American was feeling that day, American Muslims had to endure the additional burden of worrying for our own safety, in our own hometowns, far from hijackers and skyscrapers. Shots would be fired into the Islamic Center of Irving, Texas; an Islamic bookstore in Virginia would have bricks thrown through its windows; a bag of pig's blood would be left on the doorstep of an Islamic community center in San Francisco; a mosque near Chicago would be marched on by 300 people shouting racist epithets. A Muslim of Pakistani origin would be gunned down in Dallas; a Sikh man would be shot and killed in Mesa, Arizona (possibly by the same assailant who would go on to spray bullets into the home of a local Afghani family).

And those were just the cases that were reported. I know I didn't report it when a ten-year-old neighborhood boy walked by and muttered, "Terrorist," as I got into my car. My neurosurgeon friend didn't report that a nurse at the prominent Washington hospital where they both work had announced in front of him that all Muslims and Arabs should be rounded up and put into camps, as Japanese were in World War II. My family didn't report that we're sick with worry about my mother-in-law, another sister-in-law and my niece, who are visiting Pakistan, with their return uncertain.

In the days to come, in the midst of the darkness, there is some light. A neighbor stops by to tell me that he doesn't think Muslims are responsible for the acts of madmen. Strangers in Starbucks are unusually friendly to me and my son, reaching out as if to say, "We know it's not your fault." The head of a church told me his congregation wants to come and put its arms around us, and to help in any way possible - by cleaning graffiti off a mosque, by hosting our Friday prayers, whatever we needed. President Bush warns Americans not to scapegoat Muslims and Arabs. He even visits a mosque, in a show of solidarity. Congress swiftly passes a resolution to uphold the civil rights of Muslims and Arabs, urging Americans to remain united. Jewish and Christian leaders publicly decry the violence against Muslims. At a mosque in Seattle, Muslim worshippers are greeted by members of other faiths bringing them flowers.

There's something America needs to understand about Islam. Like Judaism, like Christianity, Islam doesn't condone terrorism. It doesn't allow it. It doesn't accept it. Yet, somehow, the labels jihad, holy war and suicide martyrs are still thrown around. In fact, jihad doesn't even mean holy war. It's an Arabic word that means "struggle" - struggle to please God. And suicide itself is a forbidden act in Islam. How could anyone believe that Muslims consider it martyrdom when practiced in combination with killing thousands of innocents? Anyone who claims to commit a politically motivated violent act in the name of Islam has committed a hate crime against the world's 1.2 billion Muslims.

It is not jihad to hijack a plane and fly it into a building. But in fact there was jihad done that Tuesday. It was jihad when firemen ran into imploding buildings to rescue people they didn't know. It was jihad when Americans lined up and waited to donate the blood of their own bodies. It was jihad when strangers held and comforted one another in the streets. It was jihad when rescue workers struggled to put America back together, piece by piece. Yes, there were martyrs made that Tuesday. But there were no terrorists among them. There were only Americans, of every race and religion, who, that Tuesday, took death for us.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News
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Comment #301 Removed by Moderator

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Comment #303 Removed by Moderator

To: themightysrc
The way I feel about Muslims is if they really believe in the Koran and Mohammed, they would be far happier being sent to live in an Islamic state which is what the Koran believes they should have, they're supposed to make those pilgrimages to Mecca so should be over there. People like you should agree, because you don't believe the USA or American culture is in any way superior to others so what difference should it make for them to live somewhere else? It's not like we are better so since it's all the same---and if anything they actually have the superior culture, then you shouldn't mind deporting them now.
304 posted on 10/13/2001 6:27:18 AM PDT by FITZ
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To: VeritatisSplendor
New border policy: welcome to America. Have a ham sandwich.

ROTF, Mrs VS . . .

Can't be any worse than the Smelt Fishing ritual here in Wisconsin . . .

305 posted on 10/13/2001 9:39:10 PM PDT by BraveMan
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To: themightysrc
I have no problem with those who disagree with me, or who have problems with America or American policies. We are not perfect and even I have many issues with our Government.

That aside, Killing 5,000 innocent does not warrant a sane mind with sane issues. These Men truly believe that Americans are evil and must be converted or killed. Our policy has no bearing on that thought process. Just as the PLO wishes only to "push Israel into the sea", their words! No level of diplomacy or compromise or change in policy will ever change the fact that we must convert or die in their belief system. And that is truly evil and can come from only the supreme being of evil.

You can moan all you want about policy, it does not change the fact that this was an evil act, perpetrated by evil men, with evil intent and beliefs.

So spare me your utopian ideals and innate good. If you can not come against the act of 9/11 unconditionally, you are a coward or you are unscrupulous. Either I despise and both lead to a future of obscurity and dismay.

306 posted on 10/15/2001 9:38:35 AM PDT by CyberCowboy777
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To: themightysrc
And please do not call me your son. It is dis-resepctful. Dis-respect is the first sign of a weak argument.
307 posted on 10/15/2001 3:45:37 PM PDT by CyberCowboy777
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Comment #308 Removed by Moderator


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